logo
Dove Cameron Sings to Her ‘Dangerous' Italian Lover on ‘Romeo'

Dove Cameron Sings to Her ‘Dangerous' Italian Lover on ‘Romeo'

Yahooa day ago
Dove Cameron gets dark and mythical on her new single. On Friday, the pop star released the video for 'Romeo,' her follow-up to earworm 'French Girls,' and just days after her triumphant opening set for Dua Lipa.
''Romeo' is about a love that feels mythic – a love that feels fated, all-consuming and a little dangerous and disarming,' says Cameron in a press release. 'I wrote the song and created the visuals to feel bizarre and otherworldly and purposefully lost in space and time.'
More from Rolling Stone
Santa Fe Klan, Saweetie Capture a 'Real Ride-or-Die Romance' on Single 'Locos'
Reneé Rapp Gets That Her Boo Wants to Be 'Mad,' But Why?
Doechii and Tyler, the Creator Song 'Get Right' Debuts at Louis Vuitton Fashion Show
Cameron explains that while 'Romeo' is a love song at its core, it's 'wrapped in the dark undulating production' that she's experimenting with in this new era of her music. 'I've come to love [it] so much,' she says of the new era. 'I'm excited for everyone to hear it.'
The Curry Tian-directed video captures Cameron in a series of sexy looks inside a dark, luxurious home as she sings to her lover from a bedroom, surrounded by shadowy dancers. The visuals cut to surreal scenes of her walking through an otherworldly place before she approaches a body seemingly frozen in a glass chamber. By the end, her 'Romeo' slowly comes to life.
'Give u that love you'd kill yourself for/I bleed red so Valentino,' she sings on the catchy chorus. 'No I don't speak Italiano/But I like the way you put it down slow.' (Damiano David, is that you?)
According to a press release, the new singles — 'Romeo,' 'French Girls' and February's 'Too Much' — are coming ahead of an 'exciting new chapter of music' from Cameron.
Best of Rolling Stone
Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle targeted for second time in 'Family Guy' episode
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle targeted for second time in 'Family Guy' episode

Fox News

timea few seconds ago

  • Fox News

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle targeted for second time in 'Family Guy' episode

"Family Guy" is at it again. The animated show mocked Prince Harry and Meghan Markle a second time in its most recent episode, two years after it first took a jab at the royal couple. In the July 17 episode, "Twain's World," in which characters Brian and Stewie (both voiced by creator Seth MacFarlane) travel back in time, the talking dog compares the couple to some of history's worst events. After Stewie warns Brian that taking a certain action while traveling through the past could "change the course of history," Brian answers, "You always say that, but doesn't history pretty much suck?" Then, using the comedy rule of threes, he mentions Hitler and the Crusades before Stewie quips, "Prince Harry marrying Meghan Markle." In the next moment, the show cuts to one of its signature cutaway gags with Harry sitting on a couch watching the episode. "Again?" he complains of the joke, before turning toward the camera with his hands on his hips to say, "Oh, like all of your wives are so much better?" "Family Guy," which is known for not pulling punches when it comes to its pop culture digs, first took aim at the Sussexes in 2023. In that episode, main character Peter Griffin, also voiced by MacFarlane, sits in a bar with friends pondering how to get back money he is owed when he jokes that he'll "go it alone, just like Meghan Markle and Prince Harry." The scene then cuts to cartoon versions of Harry and Meghan poolside as a butler approaches with an envelope. The butler says, "Sir, your millions from Netflix for … no one knows what." Prince Harry waves him away, saying, "Put it with the rest of them." Markle then gets a notification on her phone and declares, "Babe, time to do our daily $250,000 sponsored Instagram post for Del Taco." The animated prince sighs and says, "I shouldn't have left the made-up nonsense." Animated comedy "South Park" also made fun of the couple in a 2023 episode, "The Worldwide Privacy Tour." Described as royalty from Canada, they are depicted throughout the episode as simultaneously demanding privacy while seeking attention, appearing on talk shows and stages around the world. Prince Harry's memoir even got a satirical new title on the show, changed from "Spare" to "WAAGH." The fictional couple decided to move to South Park to convince people they are "really serious about wanting to be normal," soon unloading their private jet and moving into a house across the street from character Kyle Broflovski. Kyle is routinely distracted by them and complains to his friends at one point, "I'm sick of hearing about them! But I can't get away from them. They're everywhere!" The Canadian royalty eventually visit a branding agency, which teases that "victim" is part of their brand. Though they never addressed it publicly, a source told The Spectator that Markle had been "upset and overwhelmed" by the episode and was "annoyed by 'South Park' but refuses to watch it all." Representatives for Seth MacFarlane and the Sussexes did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

CNN analyst blasts Dem lawmakers for demanding answers on Colbert's cancellation
CNN analyst blasts Dem lawmakers for demanding answers on Colbert's cancellation

Fox News

timea few seconds ago

  • Fox News

CNN analyst blasts Dem lawmakers for demanding answers on Colbert's cancellation

CNN senior legal analyst Elie Honig ripped Democratic lawmakers this week for trying to get answers on CBS's Thursday announcement it will be canceling "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" in 2026. "The move, as you can hear, drew surprise and anger from his audience and from Democratic lawmakers too, who are now demanding answers," CNN's Abby Phillip said. Phillip then quoted a statement from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., on the announcement from the senator's X feed that said "CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump – a deal that looks like bribery. America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons." Phillip brought in Honig, who said that Democrats should move on. "Two initial reactions to this," Honig said. "Number one, what on earth is Congress doing, wasting their time on this? CBS is a private industry. If they want to give AOC the show, God bless them." "They're private," he continued. "That's First Amendment, Congress. If Democrats, if Elizabeth Warren, they go down this road, what an utter waste." CNN contributor Scott Jennings then challenged Honig, asking him why he thinks Democratic lawmakers are upset that the show is being canceled. "You don't know why they're mad about it," Jennings asked Honig. "Well, who was even on the show tonight? Adam Schiff. These shows, Colbert and the rest of them have become nothing but anti-Trump fever swap porn along with Dem guests every single night." Phillip acknowledged Jennings' stance, but then said she thinks Warren is concerned that the cancellation is due to ongoing corruption. On July 1, Paramount Global and CBS agreed to pay Trump a sum that could reach at least $30 million to settle the president's election interference lawsuit against the network.

Mariska Hargitay Jokes Only ‘Younger People' Didn't Know Her Mom Was Jayne Mansfield
Mariska Hargitay Jokes Only ‘Younger People' Didn't Know Her Mom Was Jayne Mansfield

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mariska Hargitay Jokes Only ‘Younger People' Didn't Know Her Mom Was Jayne Mansfield

NEED TO KNOW Mariska Hargitay joked that only "younger people" didn't know her mom was Jayne Mansfield during a Q&A following a special screening of her documentary My Mom Jayne on July 17 Mansfield, who died in 1967 at age 34, was a Hollywood icon who starred in films including Promises! Promises! and Too Hot to Handle In My Mom Jayne, which marked Mariska's feature film directorial debut, she examines her mother's life — and reveals a shocking family secretMariska Hargitay's mother, Jayne Mansfield, may be a Hollywood icon — but her fan base runs a bit older. While taking part in a Q&A hosted by HamptonsFilm on Thursday, July 17, Mariska, 61, joked about how not everyone knew that Mansfield was her mom when her revealing documentary, My Mom Jayne, premiered earlier this year. After panel host Molly Jong-Fast noted that "a lot of people had no idea that [Mansfield] was your mom" despite the fact that she's "really, really famous," Mariska replied, "Only younger people don't know. The kids don't know." The discussion followed a special screening of My Mom Jayne at Guild Hall in East Hampton. The documentary, which marked Mariska's feature film directorial debut, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 17 ahead of its debut on HBO and Max on June 27. In a press release announcing the documentary, Mariska said, 'This movie is a labor of love and longing. It's a search for the mother I never knew, an integration of a part of myself I'd never owned, and a reclaiming of my mother's story and my own truth." Mansfield — who rose to fame as a Playboy model and an actress, known for such films as Too Hot to Handle and Promises! Promises! — died at age 34 in a car crash in 1967. Mariska, who was 3 at the time, and her two older brothers were in the car and survived the accident. "I've spent my whole life distancing myself from my mother, Jayne Mansfield, the sex symbol," Mariska says in the film's trailer. "Her career made me want to do it differently, but I want to understand her now." "I don't have any memories of her," she adds. In the documentary, Mariska also revealed a shocking family secret that she kept for 30 years. She explained that her biological father is not Mickey Hargitay, the man who raised her, but rather a former Las Vegas entertainer named Nelson Sardelli. She told Vanity Fair that she first learned about Sardelli when she was 25 and then went to see him perform in Atlantic City, N.J., when she was 30. While Sardelli had an emotional reaction to their meeting, telling her, 'I've been waiting 30 years for this moment" — Mariska grappled with "knowing I'm living a lie my entire life." During her discussion with Jong-Fast on Thursday, Mariska shared that she spent Father's Day with Sardelli, 90, this year. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "It was so magical," she recalled. "He apologized and he said, 'Thank you for forgiving me.' And I said, 'Thank you for making the choice that you made.' " "So it's like everyone was right in the end, but I grew up not knowing that," she added. The panel discussion was part of HamptonsFilm's Summer Docs Screening Series. On Aug. 29, Middletown directors Amanda McBaine and Jesse Moss and film subject Jeff Dutemple will join Hamptons International Film Festival (HIFF) co-chair Alec Baldwin and artistic director David Nugent in conversation. Richard Gladstein, the new executive director of HamptonsFilms and HIFF, told PEOPLE: "We have a nice platform from which to show our films. And why do films want to come to film festivals? You create buzz and word of mouth about your film. That's what happens at film festivals. You discover films and filmmakers." Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store